A new documentary film fest created by the Chicago Media Project will debut at the Music Box Theater the first weekend in April, featuring the last film made by renowned director Albert Maysles, who died last March and is best known for documentaries such as "Gimme Shelter" and "Grey Gardens."

Programmed by film writer Anthony Kaufman (who also works with the Chicago International Film Festival), the fest will feature 10 films from the past year — titles that, to the best of my knowledge, have not yet had a local theatrical screening yet.

The lineup includes:

"In Transit": The final film from Albert Maysles follows the director on a three-day train trip from Chicago to Seattle aboard the Empire Builder. “Along the way,” per Variety’s film review, “something in the nature of the train or the trip lends the picture a whimsically philosophical slant, as many people take the silver conveyance to contemplate a life-changing decision or to implement one; for others, it fosters confessions and thoughtful intimacy.”

"Miss Sharon Jones": From Oscar-winning filmmaker Barbara Kopple (“Harlan County, USA”), the film follows a year-in-the-life of R&B singer Sharon Jones, who grapples with a cancer diagnosis as well as tensions within her band, the Dap-Kings.

"Audrie & Daisy": An examination of the underwhelming police response in regard to two separate but parallel stories of sexual assault committed against teenage girls (one living in small town California, the other in Missouri).

"Presenting Princess Shaw": A film that examines loneliness, anonymity and connectivity in the Internet age, where showbiz dreams remain but a mouse-click away” in its portrait of a singer-songwriter who connects with a composer who lives halfway around the world.